Style Request: The Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes
Hello!
I was hoping that it would be possible to create a new style for the Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes.
Here are the relevant, correctly formatted citations:
J. L. Campbell and O. K. Pedersen, ‘The varieties of capitalism and hybrid success’, Comparative Political Studies, XV, 2007, pp. 307–32.
doi:10.1177/0010414006286542
I. Mares, ‘Firms and the welfare state: When, why, and how does social policy matter to employers?’, in Varieties of capitalism. The institutional foundations of comparative advantage, ed. P. A. Hall & D. Soskice, New York 2001, pp. 184–213.
The ISSN and EISSN:
ISSN 0075-4390, Online ISSN: 2044-0014
The online style sheet:
http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/publications/journal/style-sheet/
I'm afraid I can't currently find a free-to-access copy of a paper from the journal to link to. Let me know if this is going to be a problem and I can have another search.
Hope this is enough info, and let me know if anything else is needed.
Thanks,
Alison
I was hoping that it would be possible to create a new style for the Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes.
Here are the relevant, correctly formatted citations:
J. L. Campbell and O. K. Pedersen, ‘The varieties of capitalism and hybrid success’, Comparative Political Studies, XV, 2007, pp. 307–32.
doi:10.1177/0010414006286542
I. Mares, ‘Firms and the welfare state: When, why, and how does social policy matter to employers?’, in Varieties of capitalism. The institutional foundations of comparative advantage, ed. P. A. Hall & D. Soskice, New York 2001, pp. 184–213.
The ISSN and EISSN:
ISSN 0075-4390, Online ISSN: 2044-0014
The online style sheet:
http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/publications/journal/style-sheet/
I'm afraid I can't currently find a free-to-access copy of a paper from the journal to link to. Let me know if this is going to be a problem and I can have another search.
Hope this is enough info, and let me know if anything else is needed.
Thanks,
Alison
Have just spotted an error in my examples above - the first one should read 'XL' instead of 'XV'. Got my Roman numerals muddled up!
If the style is unlikely to be completed within the next couple of weeks, could you suggest a similar style that might require minimal editing in terms of footnotes?
I do understand that this is all done on a case-by-case basis, though, so thanks very much for your help so far!
I have some faculty who also need this style added to the repository. Any word on whether it was added?
Thanks!
I'm the e-resources librarian at the Warburg Institute, and am very interested in having this style to the repository.
Thanks!
I'd need an example publication to work on this style. Can you upload something and send me a PM?
Thanks
Here is a draft of a style. Can you review this and let us know what needs fixing?
https://github.com/POBrien333/styles/raw/9da219725863b52a7a781a04bf175182bbdb338c/the-journal-of-the-warburg-and-courtauld-institutes.csl
For books, anything printed before 1800 is given a full first name, not merely an initial.
For PhDs, the title is cited in single inverted commas, followed by 'PhD thesis' (not in single inverted commas, but I have included them here to help make sense!) then the institution, and the year in round brackets.
For edited volumes, the editors are coming out in capitals, and should be presented in the same way as book authors. Eg C. Burnett.
For manuscripts, the information should be in this order: place, archive, call number.
For journal articles, Arabic numerals for the volume are rendered in Roman and should be in Arabic.
If I find anything else, I will let you know shortly. Thanks again.
- theses: mostly fixed. See the guidelines though, the year is NOT in brackets.
- Manuscripts: had a go at it. Let me know what's still wrong.
- edited volumes: fixed
- Journal articles: in their guidelines they give roman numerals.
https://github.com/POBrien333/styles/raw/a7c1ffa5df656142cfa5d4aad6662255c9df0235/the-journal-of-the-warburg-and-courtauld-institutes.csl
-Manuscripts look ok to me.
-Numerals are in Roman, and Arabic in footnotes only.
I'm following the guidelines re the roman numerals. This style does not have a bibliography section and only notes defined. None of the example publications I looked at have a bibliography.